Susan Shirk CV

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Susan Shirk CV SUSAN L. SHIRK Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation University of California, San Diego La Jolla, California 92093-0518 PH: (858) 822-4349; FAX: (858) 534-7655 [email protected] CURRICULUM VITAE EDUCATION Ph.D. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, September 1974 (Political Science) M.A. University of California, Berkeley, June 1968 (Asian Studies) B.A. Mount Holyoke College, 1967 (Political Science) Princeton University, Critical Languages Program, 1965–66 EMPLOYMENT 2007- Ho Miu Lam Endowed Chair in China and Pacific Relations, Graduate School of International Relations and Pacific Studies (IRPS), University of California, San Diego 2006– Director, UC Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation (IGCC) 2000– Professor, Graduate School of International Relations and Pacific Studies (IRPS), University of California, San Diego 2000–06 Research Director for International Security, Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation, University of California 1997–2000 Deputy Assistant Secretary with responsibility for China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Mongolia, East Asia and Pacific Bureau, United States Department of State 1992–97 Director, UC Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation 1991–92 Acting Director, UC Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation 1991– Professor, IRPS, University of California, San Diego 1991–97 Professor, Political Science Department, University of California, San Diego 1987– Associate Professor, IRPS, University of California, San Diego 1981– Associate Professor, Political Science Department, University of California, San Diego 1975–81 Assistant Professor, Political Science Department, University of California, San Diego 1974–75 Assistant Professor, Department of Government, University of Texas at Austin 1973–74 Assistant for Educational Planning to the Executive Dean of Undergraduate Studies, University of Texas at Dallas FELLOWSHIPS AND GRANTS 2008-13 Department of Defense, Minerva Grant, The Evolving Relationship Between Technology and National Security in China: Innovation, Defense Transformation, and China’s Place in the Global Technology Order 2009-10 MacArthur Foundation, The Future of Multilateral Security Cooperation in Northeast Asia: Exploring Regional Security Architecture and the Economics- Security Nexus. Susan L. Shirk - Page 2 - 2008-09 Arthur Ross Fellow, Center on US-China Relations, Asia Society, New York City 2006 McCormick Tribune Fund, Changing Media, Changing China 2004–05 Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, Stanford 2004– Carnegie Corporation, Track-Two Diplomacy in Northeast Asia 2002–07 National Science Foundation, NSF IGERT Program: Public Policy and Nuclear Threats: Training the Next Generation 2001–02 U.S. Department of State, Assessing Virtual Diplomacy in Northeast Asia 1997–01 Smith Richardson Foundation, China and Its Provinces: The Impact of China’s Opening on Economic Integration 1997–01 U.S. Institute of Peace and Intel, Virtual Dialogue in Northeast Asia: A Virtual Research Center 1996–97 U.S. Department of Energy (Los Alamos), Winter Seminar on Internal Relations: Security, China, and Russia 1995–99 MacArthur Foundation, Institutional Fellowships on Peace and Internal Cooperation 1995–99 William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, Core Research Program on Building Regional Environmental Cooperation 1995–96 Rockefeller Foundation, Comparative Regional Approaches/Nuclear Nonproliferation 1994–96 Japan–U.S. Friendship Commission, the Economic Structure of Asia: Competing or Complementary Networks 1994–95 U.S. Institute for Peace, China’s Maritimes Jurisdictional Disputes 1993– U.S. Department of Energy, Northeast Asia Cooperation Dialogue 1993–95 Ford Foundation and Rockefeller Brothers Fund, The China Circle: Regional Perspectives on Evolving Relations Among Taiwan, Hong Kong-Macao, and China 1993–95 Center for Global Partnership/Japan Foundation, The United States and Japan in Asia 1991–94 Henry Luce Foundation, Grant for Collaborative Research with the Tianjin Academy of Social Sciences 1991–93 Committee on Scholarly Communication with the People’s Republic of China, National Academy of Sciences (declined). 1989–90 University of California, Grant for Research on the Pacific Rim 1987–88 University of California, Grant for Research on the Pacific Rim 1984–86 Rockefeller Foundation International Relations Fellowship 1984–85 Committee on Scholarly Communication with the People’s Republic of China, National Academy of Sciences 1979–80 Institute for the Study of World Politics Research Fellowship 1979–80 SSRC-ACLS Joint Committee on Contemporary China Research Grant 1978–79 Peace Fellow, The Hoover Institute National Fellows Program 1970–72 SSRC Foreign Area Fellowship 1969–70 National Science Foundation Fellowship 1968–69 National Defense Foreign Language Fellowship 1967–68 Woodrow Wilson Fellowship PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES 2007- Member, Advisory Committee of the Universities Service Centre for China Studies Susan L. Shirk - Page 3 - 2007- Member, UC- Santa Barbara Department of Political Science External Review Committee 2007- Member, Senior Advisory Committee, UC School of Global Health 2007- Member, Advisory Committee, Scripps Institute of Oceanography 2007- Member, Advisory Committee, Asia Society 2004– Chair, External Review, Institute on International Studies, Stanford University 2002 Member, Task Force on U.S. Korea Policy, Center for International Policy, November 2002–2003 Member and Chair, Economics Sub Group, Task Force on Chinese Military Power, Council on Foreign Relations 2001– Editorial Board, the American Asian Review2001 Organizer and Chair, “Cross Strait Relations After WTO,” 30th Sino-American Conference on Contemporary China, IRPS, May 2000– Faculty Coordinator, IRPS Dean’s Roundtable 2000– Advisory Committee, the Chinese University of Hong Kong, Universities Service Centre 1996– Member and emeritus member, Aspen Strategy Group 1996–97 Editorial Board, Communist and Post-Communist Studies 1995–97 Member, Board of Trustees, U.S.–Japan Foundation 1995–97 Member, Defense Policy Board (advises U.S. Secretary of Defense) 1995–97 Member, International Institute for Strategic Studies, London 1995– Editorial Board, the China Quarterly 1995– Editorial Board, Modern China 1995– Editorial Board, Journal of Contemporary China 1995–97 Member, Board of Directors, Pacific Council on International Policy 1994–97 Member, Board of Governors, East-West Center 1993– Organizer and Chair, Northeast Asia Cooperation Dialogue 1993– Founding member of USCSCAP (United States Committee of the Council for Security and Cooperation in the Pacific) 1992– Member, Atlantic Council-NCUSCR committee, “At a Crossroads in American Policy toward China: Rebuilding a Consensus” 1992–97 Editorial Board, American Political Science Review 1991– Member, Council on Foreign Relations 1987–88 Member, Committee on International Political Science, American Political Science Association 1985–86 Chair, Curriculum Planning Committee, IRPS, University of California, San Diego 1982–91 Member of the China Council of the Asia Society 1982–91 Member of Executive Committee, National Committee on U.S.–China Relations 1977–94 Member of Board of Directors, National Committee on U.S.–China Relations 1982–84 Chief Academic Consultant, National Public Radio Course on China and Japan 1980, 1995 Consultant, the World Bank 1978–79 Member of the United Nations Association National Policy Panel to Study U.S.– China Relations 1978 Consultant, N.B.C. film documentary on education in the People’s Republic of China, September PUBLICATIONS Susan L. Shirk - Page 4 - BOOKS China: Fragile Superpower. Oxford University Press, 2007. Ed., Power and Prosperity: Economics and Security Linkages in the Asia-Pacific (with Christopher Twomey). Transaction Publishers, 1996. How China Opened Its Door: The Political Success of the PRC’s Foreign Trade and Investment Reforms. Brookings Institution, 1994. The Political Logic of Economic Reform in China. University of California Press, 1993. Ed., The Challenge of China and Japan: Politics and Development in East Asia. Praeger, 1985. Competitive Comrades: Career Incentives and Student Strategies in China. University of California Press, 1982. SCHOLARLY ARTICLES AND BOOK CHAPTERS “Trends in PRC–Taiwan Relations and United States Policy Responses.” In Sources of Conflict and Cooperation in the Taiwan Strait, Zheng Yongnian and Rayomond Ray-kuo Wu, eds. Singapore: World Scientific, 2006. “One-Sided Rivalry: China’s Perceptions and Policies Toward India.” In The India–China Relationship: What the U.S. Needs to Know, Francine Frankel and Harry Harding, eds. Woodrow Wilson Center Press, 2004. “Congressional Politics and U.S. China Policy 1996–2000.” In The Uncertain Superpower: Domestic Dimensions of U.S. Foreign Policy after the Cold War, Bernhard May and Michaela Honicke Moore, eds. Leske + Budrich, 2003. “The 16th CCP Congress and Leadership Transition in China” (with Gang Lin). Asia Program Special Report no. 105, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, September 2002. “Chinese Nationalism and Policies Toward the United States, Japan, and Taiwan.” The Aspen Institute Congressional Program on U.S.–China Relations, 2002. “China’s Perception of India: Brief Comments.” In The Rise of China in Asia: Security Implications, Carolyn W. Pumphrey, ed. Strategic Studies Institute, 2002. “The Delayed Institutionalization of Leadership Politics” In The Nature of Chinese Politics, From Mao to Jiang, Jonathan Unger, ed. M.E. Sharpe, 2002. “What Kind of Rising Power is China?” The
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